Software giant says national standard would be better than current system

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WASHINGTON — Efforts to establish national standards for protecting computer data received a boost Thursday when Microsoft Corp. announced support for the idea.

Microsoft, the world’s biggest computer software maker, did not endorse a specific bill but said a single national standard is better than the complex and sometimes contradictory patchwork approach now in place around the country. (MSNBC is a Microsoft-NBC joint venture.)

Congress has a number of proposals aimed at ensuring companies meet a certain standard for computer security and that they disclose when hackers have obtained customers’ information. But no comprehensive legislation has been proposed.

“The growing focus on privacy at both state and federal levels has resulted in an increasingly rapid adoption of well-intended privacy laws that are at times overlapping, inconsistent and often incomplete,” Microsoft general counsel Brad Smith said in a speech to the Congressional Internet Caucus.

“This is not only confusing for businesses, but it also leaves consumers unprotected. A single federal approach will create a common standard for protection that consumers and businesses can understand and count on.”

Jerry Berman, president of the Center for Democracy and Technology, which works to works to enhance electronic privacy, called Microsoft’s announcement “a landmark moment in the cause of establishing and protecting individual privacy rights online.”

Lawmakers’ interest in requiring companies to disclose when their computer systems have been breached runs counter to years of efforts by the FBI and U.S. prosecutors to shield corporations that have been victims of hackers from bad publicity by keeping such crimes out of headlines.